Summary Of Fyodor Dostoevsky's Crime And Punishment

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Introduction “Sometimes, though, he is not at all morbid, just cold and inhumanely callous; it’s as though he were alternating between two characters” (Dostoevsky 206). In Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment, the protagonist is depicted as struggling between two mental states – one of normality, and one that demonstrates extreme manic tendencies. In the past, scholars have mentioned schizophrenia as the cause of Raskolnikov’s behavior; however, bipolar disorder, characterized by increased speech, racing thoughts, delusional thinking, manic episodes, distractibility, agitation, and inflated grandiosity (Davision et al 124), is the fundamental cause of his perverse way of thought and the situations that he places himself in. In cases …show more content…

The language that is used to describe this impulsiveness is abrupt in order to create a sense of urgency in scenes. When another character is “alarmed by his expression” (Dostoevsky 189), his expression “reveal(s) an agonizingly poignant emotion, and at the same time something immobile, almost insane” (Dostoevsky 189). Dostoevsky, throughout the novel, develops a habit of describing Raskolnikov’s facial expressions in order for readers to experience the same imagery that surrounding characters are experiencing at the time when the facial expressions are taking place. Furthermore, sentences that describe Raskolnikov’s odd habits are structured in a two parts: the beginning of the sentence will introduce a habit, and will then shift to demonstrate the underlining significance of said habit. Linking back to the Raskolnikov’s habit of talking to himself, the two-part sentence structure is shown with the line of: “he walked, as his habit was, without noticing his way, whispering and even speaking aloud to himself” (Dostoevsky 41). However, Dostoevsky will also throw in short sentences that will disrupt the prose of the novel in order to convey the mentality of his character during a scene;

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